Across from Shao Meng, Dai Ah Hong's face fluctuated unpredictably, and he said, "Mr. Shao, isn't the amount of land you are asking for too much? It's all prime resource-producing areas of our Northeast Six States, and these cooperation clauses are also excessively harsh."
Dai Ah Hong held a document in his hand, detailing the cooperative projects set by Jieke Group, which included the construction and ownership of railways, roads, and airports, military garrison rights, integrated trade agreements, unilateral tariff preferences, purchasing weapons produced by Jieke Group, using Zen Country Currency, and prioritizing Jieke Group in the development and shareholding of all domestic mining resources...
Any country could see that these terms constituted an extremely oppressive and unequal treaty.
Dai Ah Hong understood very well that this so-called contract was essentially a euphemism for an unequal treaty, with no substantial difference.